Backbone of Our Movement: Zane Alcorn
Zane Alcorn, rank and file member of the CFMMEU, constriction division.
How long have you been a union member?
I’ve been a member of the CFMEU for about 6 years and was a member of MEAA and LHMU prior to that. So on and off for about 13 years. Prior to that I was involved in the student union at Newcastle uni and I was elected enviro officer at one point.
Why did you join the union?
Back around 2006 or so I went to a May Day film screening by Green Left in Newcastle and watched “Rocking the Foundations”. Here we go, what’s this boring black and white video these crusty old socialists want to show us, I thought.
Read moreBackbone of Our Movement: Michelle Reeves
Michelle Reeves, rank and file member of the Community and Public Sector Union (CPSU)
How long have you been a union member?
A long time! Joined at 16 at my first workplace with a union presence.
Why did you join the union?
When I was 16, I was lucky enough to be working in a unionised industry! Most of my team were in the union, had union stickers on their desks, and pamphlets about joining in the break room. Union presence was high, and most workplace matters were discussed through a unionist lens.
Read moreBackbone of Our Movement: Felicity
Felicity, rank and file member of the Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation
How long have you been a union member?
9 years.
Why did you join the union?
I joined the ANMF because they provide professional indemnity insurance which was a requirement to start nursing. The ANMF has been a great resource and always available to answer queries about pay or conditions.
Read moreBackbone of Our Movement: Olly
Olly, delegate at the Australian Services Union VicTas
How long have you been a union member?
Since my first job as a teenager.
Why did you join the union?
Working class people are the overwhelming majority of society. We do all the work, we produce all wealth, and we should run things ourselves. The only way to do this is to come together with our fellow workers and organise – to win better wages and working conditions today, and to build towards a world where we control our own workplaces and run them democratically in the interests of everyone, not just for profit.
Read moreBackbone of Our Movement: Vanessa Born
Vanessa Born, member of the Australian Services Union (ASU)
How long have you been a union member?
10 years.
Why did you join the union?
I joined during the Equal Pay Campaign. My dad had always been a union member, but my feminist course at Uni made me think that unions only really helped out men. When an ASU organiser came to visit my workplace for the first time during the Equal Pay Campaign, I asked if I could come and listen to the meeting, and I suddenly realised that unions were for women too, so I joined immediately.
Read moreOHS Matters: OHS Laws for Volunteers and Non-Employees
“I am a volunteer in an information centre and am being asked to clean toilet facilities open to the public daily. Are they allowed to do this?”
Read moreParvin Mohammadi: Long-time labour and women’s activist
Parvin Mohammadi is a 59 year old Iranian woman who is currently in hiding from authorities in Iran.
Mohammadi was born in a working class family and her formative teenage years were in the tumultuous years that led to the 1979 Iranian Revolution that overthrew the repressive dictatorship of the Shah, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.
Read moreBackbone of Our Movement: Kim Bullimore
Kim Bullimore, NTEU Rank and file
How long have you been a union member?
I am a currently a member of the National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU). I have been a rank-and-file member now for 5 or 6 years. However, I first joined a union more than 30+ years ago, when I was 19 or 20 years old and working in retail. Coming from a working-class family, I understood the importance of being part of a union, as they are the basic defence organisation for the working class. Trade unions allow us to collectively organise, to fight and defend workers right and to act in solidarity with oppressed and minority groups.
Read moreOHS Matters: Women and Occupational Health and Safety
On the occasion of International Women’s Day, March 8, we pose the question: are women as equally protected as men under Australia’s OHS/WHS laws?
Australia’s OHS/WHS laws apply to all employee/workers equally – the laws do not discriminate and therefore everyone’s health and safety at work is equally protected.
Read moreBackbone of Our Movement: Fran Mckechnie
Fran Mckechnie
Australian Services Union Vic/Tas, Workplace delegate
Member of Unionists for Refugees
How long have you been a union member?
All my working life – since at least 1983.
Why did you join the union?
Strength and unity. My father was a strong union member on the waterfront. What really left an impression on me was the nurses’ strike under Irene Bolger when I was working as a nurse assistant. It opened my eyes to how the union could stand up for workers even though it felt like our backs were against the wall.
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